No CrossRef data available.
Article contents
Vladimir Spasovich and the Development of the Legal Profession in Russia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 February 2019
Extract
Russian society is currently struggling on its road towards recognizing the rights and freedoms of the individual, as well as towards establishing the rule of law and institutions, norms and procedures of a civil society. The current poor state of the legal profession is due significantly to lawyers with substandard qualifications. This fact has delayed the speed of progressive social, political and spiritual reforms, and has complicated the quest for freedom and legal rights by the Russian people. An analysis of the previous Russian experience and a creative interpretation of state and legal traditions might be useful to solve current problems. One such lesson may be learned from studying the history of the Bar (Advokatura), which once used to influence the social and political life in Russia.
- Type
- Articles
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © 2004 by the International Association of Law Libraries.
References
1 See: Skripilev, E. A. Korol Russkoi Advokaturi [The King of the Russian Advocacy], Pravo, Gosudarstvo I, 1995, No. 10, at 144-152; Gorin, A. G., Iuridicheskie Obschestva v Dorevolutsionnoi Rossii [Legal Societies in Pre-revolutionary Russia], Pravo, Sovetskoe Gosudarstvo I, 1989, No. 7, at 118-119.Google Scholar
2 Makalinskii, P. V. S-Peterburgskaia Prisiazhnaia Advokatura [St. Petersburg Bar Association], St. Petersburg, 1889, at 133.Google Scholar
3 Spasovich, V. D. Zastolnie rechi (1871-1901) [Toasting Speeches], Leipzig, 1903, at 85.Google Scholar
4 Troitsky, N. A. Tsarizm pod sudom progressivnoi obschestvennosti (1866-1885) [Tsarism under the trial of progressive society], Moscow, Nauka, 1979, at 186.Google Scholar
5 Dzhanishev, G. M. Iz Epokhi Velikih Reform [From the epokh of great reforms], Moscow, 1894, at 618.Google Scholar
6 Koni, A. F. Sobranie Sochinenii [Collected works], V. 5, Moscow, 1968 at 116-118.Google Scholar
7 Spasovich, V. D. Sochineniia [Papers], V. 7, St. Petersburg, 1911, at 21.Google Scholar
8 Vestnik Evropi, No. 11, 1906, at 459.Google Scholar
9 See: Pomeranz, W. “Legal Assistance in Tsarist Russia,” Wisconsin International Law Journal 14:592 (No. 3).Google Scholar
10 Sobranie Reshenii Grazhdanskogo Kassatsionnogo Departamenta Pravitelstvuiuschego Senata [Collection of Rulings of the Civil Cassational Department of the Governing Senate], St. Petersburg, 1876, No. 435.Google Scholar
11 Otchet St. Petersburgskogo Soveta Prisiazhnikh Poverennikh za 1881-1882 g.g. [Annual report of the St. Petersburg Council of Sworn Attorneys for 1881-1882], St. Petersburg, 1882.Google Scholar
12 Sudebnii Vestnik 1874, No. 6, at 131-134.Google Scholar
13 Supra, note 3, at 30.Google Scholar
14 Timofeev, A. G. Sudebnoe Krasnorechie v Rossii, [Court Eloquence in Russia], St.Petersburg, 1900, at 103.Google Scholar
15 Liakhovetskii, L. D. Harakteristika Izvestnih Russkikh Sudebnikh Oratorov, [Description of famous Russian court orators], St. Petersburg, 1897, at 242.Google Scholar
16 Zhurnal Ministerstva Narodnogo Prosvescheniia, 1875, No. 9, at 2.Google Scholar
17 Supra note 6, v. 5, at 118.Google Scholar
18 Supra note 7, V. 3 at 256.Google Scholar
19 Id., at 311.Google Scholar
20 Id., V. 4 at 258.Google Scholar
21 Ivanov, A. Podgotovka Diplomirovannih Spetsialistov v Rossii v kontse19 - nachale 20 vekov [Preparation of Graduated Specialists in Russia in the late 19 - early 20 century], “Vestnik Vysshei Shkoly,” 1991, No.3 at 75.Google Scholar